The town is the resting place of the Polish poet
Aleksander Fredro, who was buried in a local Roman Catholic church in 1876. Rudky is on the
Vishnya river and is the home of the Vyshnia College of the Lviv National Agricultural University. Rudky Arboretum is on the southern edge of the town. Rudky (known in Polish as Rudki) was founded in the late 14th century in
Kingdom of Poland, after
Red Ruthenia was annexed by Poland. Its Roman Catholic parish was created in the early 15th century, and during the
Protestant Reformation, the church was in 1550 turned into a Calvinist prayer house. In 1655, construction of a new church was initiated by the owner of the town, Andrzej Stano (
Gozdawa coat of arms). Soon afterwards, the
Swedish invasion of Poland brought widespread destruction to Rudki and its area, and the church was not completed until 1728. In 1742, Rudki was purchased by the Fredro family (
Boncza coat of arms). Until the
Partitions of Poland) Rudki belonged to
Ruthenian Voivodeship. In 1772, it was annexed by the
Habsburg Empire, as part of Austrian
Galicia. After the
Napoleonic Wars, Count Aleksander Fredro settled here. In 1880, the population of the town was 2582, with 1352 Jews and 945 Poles. In 1891, Polish scientist Mieczyslawa Ruxerowna was born here. In 1918-1919, Rudki
returned to Poland. In the
Second Polish Republic, it was the seat of a county in
Lwow Voivodeship, and until 1939, belonged to the Fredro family. At that time, the town had a population of 3,500, divided into Jewish, Polish and Ukrainian communities. Following the
Invasion of Poland. Rudki was occupied by the
Soviet Union, and its name was changed to Rudky. In June 1941, the
NKVD murdered approximately 200 prisoners here (see
NKVD prisoner massacres). On June 27, 1941, the Germans occupied Rudki. In July, the
Einsatzgruppen murdered 39 leaders of the Jewish community in the Berezina forest. On April 9, 1943, during the liquidation of the ghetto, Ukrainian policemen assisted German police and SD in executing about 1,700 Jews near the Brzezina forest and deporting about 300 Jews to the
Janowska camp in Lviv. On July 15, 2016, Archbishop Mieczyslaw Mokrzycki of the Roman Catholic Church dedicated the museum of Polish playwright and poet
Aleksander Fredro, which was opened on the 140th anniversary of the death of the prominent Polish playwright in the bell tower of the Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary in Rudky (now the sanctuary of Our Lady of Rudky). The museum's exposition includes materials on the life and work of Aleksander Fredro, publications of his works, and theater posters from around the world. == Cult constructions and religion ==